Cabinet of the Mongol Uls: Difference between revisions

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| July 22, 2022
| July 22, 2022
| Rebiya Nur
| Rebiya Nur
| [[File:Rebiya Nur]]
| [[File:Rebiya Nur.jpeg]]
| style="background-color:#CC8A5C" |
| style="background-color:#CC8A5C" |
| [[Central Asian People's Party|CAPP]]
| [[Central Asian People's Party|CAPP]]

Revision as of 06:38, 10 December 2023

Second Orda Cabinet
Golden Horde flag 1339.svg
2nd Cabinet of the Mongol Uls
Incumbent
Date formed22 July 2022
People
Head of governmentBataariin Orda
Deputy head of governmentBatu Ganbat
Sherig Toka
Member partyGreater Mongolia Movement
Central Asian People's Party
Status in legislatureMinority
Opposition partyUniting Mongolia
Kok Bayraq
History
Election(s)2022
PredecessorFirst Orda Cabinet

The Cabinet of the Mongol Uls is the executive branch of the government of the Mongol Uls, responsible to the Kurultai. Tasked with the implementation of govenment policy, the Cabinet oversees the day-to-day affairs of the Khanate, manages foreign policy, and proposes an annual budget to the Kurultai. The second and incumbent cabinet is the Second Orda Cabinet, a minority cabinet led by Prime Minister Bataariin Orda and composed of the Greater Mongolia Movement and Central Asian People's Party, with external support from the Gurkani Clerical Association, the Islamic Modernist Party, and the Gangs Seng Ge (Tibetan People's Party).

Formation

The Cabinet must maintain the majority support of the Kurultai for confidence and supply votes; however, a single party has never won enough seats to govern alone, so all cabinets have been coalition governments with other parties providing additional external support. Forming a majority in the Kurultai is especially hard due to the fact that slightly less than a third of the Kurultai seats are held by nonpartisan Clan Chieftains, who by custom abstain on investiture, confidence, and supply votes. As investiture votes require an absolute (51 vote) majority, abstentions count as de facto "no" votes, meaning that Prime Ministers wishing to be invested must secure the support of more than three-quarters of those voting. While attempts have been made to change this law, such proposals have been voted down by minority parties, who rely on their kingmaker status in investiture votes in order to secure concessions for their constituents.

Composition

Position Since Name Picture Party
Prime Minister
July 22, 2022 Bataariin Orda Bataariin Orda.jpeg Independent (supported by DMN)
First Deputy Prime Minister
Minister of Foreign Affairs
July 22, 2022 Batu Ganbat Batu Ganbat.jpeg DMN
Second Deputy Prime Minister
Minister of Minority Affairs
July 22, 2022 Sherig Toka Sherig Toka.jpeg CAPP
Minister of Defense and the Interior
July 22, 2022 Origiyn Batu Origiyn Batu.png DMN
Minister of Finance and the Economy
July 22, 2022 Jambal Nomin Jambal Nomin.jpeg DMN
Minister of Education, Culture, and Health
July 22, 2022 Rebiya Nur Rebiya Nur.jpeg CAPP
Minister of Justice, Labour, and Social Affairs
July 22, 2022 Begum Lkhagvyn Maral Lkhagvyn Maral.png DMN
Khalifa of Gurkaniyan (ex officio)
N/A Rashid Markhayev GCA
Commander of the Golden Horde (ex officio)
N/A Dayanniin Khusei DMN
Baskan of Kharkorin (ex officio)
N/A Ulusboludiin Mandukhai DMN